latin
"Degli" is a contraction in Italian meaning "of the" and "Dei" means "of the" in English.
Ahg-noos day-ee.
"DEI" stands for diversity, equity, and inclusion. It refers to a set of practices and policies that aim to create a more diverse and inclusive workplace or community where all individuals have equal opportunities for growth and success.
It is pronounced 'ahg-noos day-ee'.
There is not a single "melanesian" language, as Melanesia is a region consisting of several countries with diverse languages. In Papua New Guinea, you can say "hello" as "gutpela dei" in Tok Pisin, or "yumi wanem?" in Bislama. In Fiji, you would say "bula" as a general greeting.
Did you mean...civitas Dei 'state (land) of God'Civitas has a number of translations in English. "civeta dei" may be a reference to the famous work of St. Augustine of Hippo titled De civitate Dei, usually translated as "[On] the City of God."
It is Latin.
B. M. Quartu has written: 'Dizionario dei sinonimi e dei contrari' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Italian language, Synonyms and antonyms
Latin is the main language of ancient Rome and its empire. Children of God, when translated into Latin is: Filii Dei.
Francesca Cadel has written: 'La lingua dei desideri' -- subject(s): Language
dei
Vox Dei para Vox Dei was created in 1974.
Cesare Bione has written: 'Le forme poetiche dei greci e dei romani' -- subject(s): Classical languages, Metrics and rhythmics 'Vocabolario della lingua latina' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Italian, Italian language, Latin, Latin language 'Orazio e Virgilio'
image by dei
Agni dei.
Neri Binazzi has written: 'Le parole dei giovani fiorentini' -- subject(s): Italian language, Spoken Italian, Youth, Usage, Language, Social aspects, Variation
Robert Thomas Marshall has written: 'Studies in the political and socio-religious terminology of the De civitate Dei' -- subject(s): Glossaries, vocabularies, Latin language, Latin language, Postclassical, Postclassical Latin language, Semantics